Search
|
Directory
|
Calendars
Admissions
Academics
Campus Life
Athletics
Arts
About Middlebury
Administration
My Midd Experience
Quick Facts
Middlebury Campus
Public Affairs
General Information & Links
Student Stories & Hometown News
Athletic News
News Headlines
Submit News Release
Middlebury in the News
Faculty Experts
Working with the Media
Commencement Address Archive
Contact Us
Calendars
Middlebury College Handbook
Campus Media
President of the College
Privacy
Copyright
Home
>
About Middlebury
>
Public Affairs
>
News Headlines
>
2009 News
> 'Sustainability Report Card' gives Middlebury high marks
'Sustainability Report Card' gives Middlebury high marks
Contact:
Stephen C Diehl
scdiehl@middlebury.edu
802.443.5629
5 Court Street
October 08, 2009
The Leed Platinum-certified Franklin Environmental Center at Hillcrest.
MIDDLEBURY, Vt. — Middlebury College is one of 26 institutions in the United States and Canada to be selected as an “Overall College Sustainability Leader” in the 2010 edition of the
College Sustainability Report Card
.
Now in its fourth year, the College Sustainability Report Card seeks to evaluate the sustainability of campus operations and endowment investments. Published by the Cambridge, Mass.-based Sustainable Endowments Institute, the report card examines the practices of 300 public and private colleges and universities in North America that generally have the largest endowments. The schools profiled have combined holdings representing more than $325 billion in endowment assets, or more than 95 percent of all university endowments.
Middlebury’s report card shows that the college performed well enough in all categories to merit the highest overall grade of “A-.” It mentions a number of environmental initiatives specifically, including the college's carbon neutrality goal, the biomass plant, and the LEED Platinum certified Franklin Environmental Center at Hillcrest.
The report card includes grades for each institution in nine categories: administration, climate change and energy, food and recycling, green building, student involvement, transportation, endowment transparency, investment priorities, and shareholder engagement.
Eighty schools, including Middlebury, achieved “Campus Sustainability Leader” status by scoring high marks in all six campus categories or those categories unrelated to finances.
The College Sustainability Report Card is part of the nonprofit Sustainable Endowments Institute, which is engaged in research and education to advance sustainability in campus operations and endowment practices. Founded in 2005, the institute is a special project of Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors and receives funding from the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, V. Kann Rasmussen Foundation, Kendall Foundation, Surdna Foundation and the Nathan Cummings Foundation, among others.
Students
Alumni
Faculty & Staff
Donors